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					Originally Posted by  Mark T. DeNucci, Sr.
					 
				 
				Fiasco: 
 
When I watch this play as an engineer I see an inelastic collision between stationary object of large mass and a small mass moving at a high rate of velocity. 
 
When I watch this play as a basketball official I see G2 setting a legal screen against B1.  Once again, this is a casebook play for a legal screen.  Yes, B1 went down hard, but that is the result of an inelastic collision (see the above paragraph).  Normally, I will not question a fellow official's judgement, but I will make exceptions for guarding/screening (block/charge) situations.  I am sorry but this is a legal screen and there is not any defense to call it anything but a legal screen. 
 
MTD, Sr. 
			
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 Ah, the last rhetorical refuge of any desperate litigant.  Sometimes referred to as  "petitio principii," or "begging the question," it is more commonly known as the "Because I said so" fallacy.